Dinosaurs and Other Monsters by Scientific American
English | 2004 | ISBN: N/A | 99 pages | PDF | 4.52 Mb
English | 2004 | ISBN: N/A | 99 pages | PDF | 4.52 Mb
FLASHING A MOUTHFUL of 15-centimeter-long teeth like serrated knives, Tyrannosaurus rex ripped flesh from bone—and not just at mealtimes. In between entrées, the brute very likely battled its fellow tyrannosaurs over territory and mates. Ichthyosaurs, those fish-shaped lizards with sinuous bodies that measured twice the height of a human, chased lesser monsters through the open oceans. Some of the birds could have given Alfred Hitchcock fresh nightmares: two-meter-tall phorusrhacoids sprinted at 70 kilometers an hour and snapped their massive beaks on victims, beat them senseless against the ground and then swallowed them whole.
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